What To Know About Wheel Size on a Sailboat

The bigger the wheel, the cooler the sailboat. Or so I thought.

When I first got into big boat sailing, the bigger the wheel, the cooler the boat. Now we’ve got America’s Cup boats ripping around with wheels no bigger than a MINI Cooper’s, so who knows what’s cool anymore? But in addition to practical considerations such as making it impossible to move around the cockpit or having the wheel clang against the floor or cockpit seats, changing the wheel diameter and leaving everything else the same will affect the load you feel in your hand while steering. This probably makes intuitive sense.

Sailboat Steering Wheel
Your steering should feel pretty darn good for your boat's intended purpose. Photo courtesy of Edson Marine

A larger diameter wheel gives you greater leverage over the steering forces generated by the rudder. This makes the steering forces feel “lighter,” where going to a smaller wheel makes the steering forces feel greater. Note that the forces transmitted to the wheel are unchanged, but how you interpret them changes. There are different ways to change the actual force that the rudder generates. Heel angle, balance of the sail plan and sail trim, boat weight, speed, and rudder shape/size/balance will all change how much rudder force is generated. For those of you familiar with polar diagrams, the rudder load map of your boat will roughly match the polar diagram—where the polars go out, rudder loads are high and vice versa. 

Steering system design

When we design steering systems, we take all of those loads into account as well as possible and tailor the gear ratio to be appropriate to the desired helm loading. Helm loading is an interesting one, as you and I could easily have different preferences given different sailing styles, and it also affects the responsiveness of the steering. Steering with a higher gear ratio will be lighter and take more degrees of wheel turn to turn the boat a given amount. We have superyachts with our steering that take 10 turns to do the full (standard) 72* steering sweep, while your standard 35-footer will only take one-and-change wheel turns to go from hard-over to hard-over. Ten turns stop-to-stop gets a little dicey when you’re bringing a 120-footer into the slip, so these boats often have variable steering gearing: a topic for another day. 

Wheel size is downstream of all of that, so it will only affect your ability to manage those stresses. Have a look at the spreadsheet, which is part of a worksheet that we use when working on a new steering project.  

Sailboat wheel size chart from Edson
This spreadsheet is part of what is used when working on a new steering project. 

Notice that “Turns HO-HO” (hard over one way to hard over the other way) stays at 1.27 in both columns, while the “Turning Force” changes by 20 percent. Apart from a lighter helm, the big change you’ll feel here is the amount of distance your hands will move to make any given direction change. Sailing upwind in steady displacement conditions, a large wheel will give a huge degree of resolution—you move the wheel a hand-width or two, and that’s a very subtle adjustment. The same movement with a tiny wheel would send the crew scrambling to prepare for a tack. The other side of this is downwind in feisty breeze and waves, where smaller wheels give you an amazing ability to quickly change course for changes in wave or apparent wind dynamics.

 

Fundamentally, if the naval architect and steering designer have done their job correctly and chosen an appropriate wheel size, your steering should feel pretty darn good for your boat’s intended purpose. 

by Dave Kirkpatrick of Edson Marine

Questions? email Dave